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The Establishments war on Donald Trump Title: British spy behind Trump-Russia dossier could be forced to talk after US court ruling A ruling by Judge Ursula Ungaro allows lawyers for a Russian technology executive named in the dossier to seek British approval to question onetime MI6 agent Christopher Steele about the funding and sourcing of the dossier under oath. The request was made as part of a libel suit brought by Webzilla CEO Aleksej Gubarev against the website Buzzfeed, which was first to publish the dossier Steele prepared. I suspect that I'll be the first to speak to him, Gubarevs attorney, Valentin Gurvits, told ABC News this week. I know that he is trying very hard to prevent that from happening. I think it was disgraceful, disgraceful that the intelligence agencies allowed any information that turned out to be so false and fake out, Trump said. Interest in the funding and sourcing for the dossier led the Senate Judiciary Committee to summon Glenn Simpson, the head of the Washington, D.C.-based research firm Fusion GPS that commissioned Steeles work, to a closed session meeting scheduled for Tuesday. In a letter to Simpson, Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, indicated he wants Simpson to reveal who first hired him to investigate Trumps Russia ties and which government agencies received copies when it was completed. We are interested in the history of the dossier, including how it was funded, compiled and how it was used, a Grassley aide told ABC News. There's certainly plenty of evidence that Russia worked to interfere with our democratic process
but allegations that the Trump campaign was involved stem largely from the contents of a salacious and unverified anti-Trump dossier, whose creation was overseen by Fusion GPS for political purposes, another Republican Judiciary Committee aide said. Reports that the FBI then used the dossier as a roadmap for its investigation, attempted to hire the former British spy who was compiling it, and may have relied on it to obtain special surveillance authority raises significant oversight and civil liberties concerns that warrant scrutiny. A source familiar with the Fusion GPS negotiations with the Senate Judiciary Committee told ABC News that Simpson is ready and willing to answer questions. Mr. Simpson will participate in a transcribed interview with the committee, and so far is the only person who has been willing to do so, the source said. Both Simpson and Steele have also been drawn into defamation lawsuits filed by the Russian tech mogul, Gubarev, in Great Britain and in the U.S. District Court in the Southern District of Florida. Gubarevs named appeared in the dossier, which was later published online by Buzzfeed. The dossier alleges that Gubarev had been recruited under duress by Russian agents, and that his company had transmitted viruses, planted bugs, stolen data and conducted altering operations against the Democratic Party leadership during the 2016 elections. Gubarev has strongly denied all of those claims. His response is it is a lie. It is a fabrication, Gurvits, Gubarevs attorney, told ABC News. Never happened. Buzzfeed initially published the dossier with references to Gubarev but later redacted Gubarevs name and the name of his company on the copy of the document published by the website. Attorneys for Buzzfeed, Steele and Simpson declined to comment. Gubarevs lawsuit has attracted attention because his lawyers have expressly stated they want to ask Steele a former British intelligence officer stationed in Moscow to identify the sources he relied upon to prepare the dossier. A Russian who lives in Cyprus, Gubarev and his company operates one of the largest web-hosting networks in Europe. In a lengthy interview with ABC News, his lawyer rejected the suggestion that Gubarev is acting as a surrogate for the Kremlin who is attempting to use the U.S. courts to unmask the identities of Steeles Russian sources. It's clear that we're not acting on behalf of the Russians, Gurvits told ABC news. We are acting on behalf of a businessman who has less ties, frankly, with Russia than he does with the United States. Forty percent of his business comes from the United States. This is not a relationship that a sane person would ever mess with. If he has the opportunity to take Steeles sworn testimony, Gurvits said, my number-one question is, Why was this allegation about my clients included [in the dossier]? he said. Where did you get it? What did you do to verify it? And who did you communicate it to?" In June court filings in the United Kingdom, Steeles attorneys answered the last question, telling the court he shared his findings with a representative of Sen. John McCain. Arrangements were then made through an intermediary to get the document to McCain, who chairs the Senate Armed Services Committee, so that it was known to
the United States governments at a high level by persons with responsibility for national security, Steeles filing in British court says. McCain released a statement in January saying he then delivered the information to the director of the FBI, because he had been unable to assess the accuracy of the claims on his own. That has been the extent of my contact with the FBI or any other government agency regarding this issue. As for who funded Steeles research effort in the first place, that remains a mystery. British court records have only identified the clients as a Republican opponent of Trumps initially, and a Democratic funder later. Grassley aides told ABC News that Judiciary Committee investigators plan to ask Simpson Tuesday to reveal the identity of his clients, but they are not optimistic they will get an answer. Attorneys for Fusion have already indicated to the committee that its client relationships are confidential. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 9.
#1. To: Tooconservative (#0)
Evidence or speculation? Maybe by "interference" they're referring to some kid in Moscow who called the DNC headquarters and asked them if they had Prince Albert in a can.
Have no doubt, Russia has interfered in our elections for many decades, just as we meddle in elections all over the world. Putin is still peeved at Hitlery because of how she opposed him returning to the Russian presidency in 2011. This was his revenge. But make no mistake, Russia does want to delegitimize any and all elections because the Russian elite, whether Tsarist or communist or "capitalist", has never had any use for any flavor of "democracy" other than as a propaganda sham to present to the West. I'm glad we're finally seeing some action out of this judge and out of Grassley. There's a lot of news going on if you just ignore the crap about tacky Confederate statues that no one really gives a crap about anyway. Don't believe me? Check out the reporting on the condition of Grant's tomb near Harlem. Full of sewage from street people and empty liquor bottles and also needles and other drug detritus from the addicts. People have sex there, consensual or with hookers. This is Grant, the guy who won the Civil War for the North and was elected president as a result. It was once a bigger tourist attraction than the Statue of Liberty or the Empire State building or any of the rest of the usual NYC tourist traps. No one really gives much of a crap about any of these Civil War statues and memorials IMO. They want to rant about them and score cheap political points (to #Resist) but they don't actually care much at all.
No. This last one. In 2016. None of the investigations have concluded, yet we've placed sanctions on Russia based on some stupid "intelligence" memo which essentially listed the accusations then called them facts.
Russia does love to meddle in elections if they can. The same way the tsar loved to sail his navy around the world to impress and intimidate other countries. It's a Russian thing, no matter the form of government they're using. They're always in a "Up yours, buddy" mood with foreigners. Kind of a toxic personality trait that their leaders all have.
Strange that no other country has picked this idea. Must be too complex to imitate.
#10. To: A Pole (#9)
As usual, you post off-topic. Thanks for participating, asshole.
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